Cobussen - 13 Meditations On - Black Angels
Cobussen - 13 Meditations On - Black Angels
Cobussen - 13 Meditations On - Black Angels
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CR: The New Centennial Review
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Music and Spirituality
13 Meditations around George Crumb's Black Angels
Marcel Cobussen
Leiden University
- George Crumb
i. Departure
CR: The New Centennial Review, Vol. 7, No. 1, 2007, pp. 181-211. issn 1532-68
# 181
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i82 Music and Spirituality
respond. An encounter that does not appeal to (my) freedom ("my will") for an
alliance. I am in relation (Buber 1958, l).1 That is, I am created (for example as
a listener) in this relationship (just as music is created in this relationship) and,
simultaneously, I am dissolved in it. Beyond control. It is the music that encounters
me. But it is I who relates to it, who offers it hospitality. So, the relationship entails
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Marcel Cobussen 183
the pure and simple absence of frames. But neither am I pleading for a reframin
new or better ones. (Although, how unavoidable will this be?) What I am all
ing to is that "something" always already seems to withdraw from these theori
methods, and categories. There seems to be a space between the sounds that
relate to and the language we have to communicate with, a space between catego
and experience, representation and reality, language and being, as Geraldine Fin
describes it elsewhere (Finn 1996, 172). Is it here that music resides, hides,
system with another. The " space between " cannot be regarded as a category, nor h
it any of the characteristics we are acquainted with when dealing with theories
everything that can be determined as Being, One, or Whole. The "and" as ext
being, or being between.3 "Inter-esse. " The power of these minorities does not li
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i84 Music and Spirituality
mine). A soul leaves Heaven in order to descend upon an unborn child. It will lose
all conscious contact with its source; this will even be considered impossible and
unacceptable. The connection with the source - with God - will be broken. This is
how "Departure" and "Absence" come about. Ultimately, however, there will be a
" Return . " But not before " the last Neshamah has brought the divine on Earth to
its ultimate conclusion . . . That is the piece in God's Words by which He renews his
creation everyday, words in which the prophets, the deliverers, the transmitters of
Gos Word speak of the future, of a life after this world, of a great return and of
and formal structures are all determined by the "holy" numbers, 7 and 13 (Crumb
1970, program notes). In a symmetrical arch form of 13 movements, movements
1, 7, and 13 can be considered key points in this work (because, for example, these
are the only movements where all four musicians are playing simultaneously). An
important pitch element in the work - descending E, A, andD# - also symbolizes
(for example, the 7 days of Creation and Jesus and his 12 disciples, though the
number 13 is as often connected with evil).4 Crumb's sketches of the Dark Land
appear to be the stage of a cosmic battle between 7 and 13.
Third level. Black Angels is filled with music symbols such as the "Diabolus
in Musica" ("Devil in music"; the diminished fifth, the tritone) and the "Trillo di
Diavolo" (the "Devil's Trill," first introduced in a composition of the same name by
the eighteenth- century Italian composer and violinist Giuseppe Tartini). Finally,
the subtitles of two movements, "God-Music" and "Devil-Music," enhance the
symbolic connotations of a religious or spiritual experience.
Black Angels. Spirituality and music. In music. Or at least around music. But
this is not what I mean. This is not how I like to (re)think spirituality. In my opin-
ion, in my relation with this work, Black Angels testifies to another spirituality.
Although numerology, specific musical symbols, and linguistic allusions definitely
add to a certain spiritual working of this music, the spirituality I am after has to
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Marcel Cobussen 185
be found or situated elsewhere.5 Situated? Found? No! Wrong words. How not
enclose spirituality in some kind of knowledge , some kind of segregated place o
again? Let's turn to Crumb's own words: "I have always considered music to be a
substance endowed with magical properties . . . Music is analy zahle only on the m
mechanistic level; the important elements - the spiritual impulse, the psycholog
cal curve , the metaphysical implications - are understandable only in terms of t
music itself " The important elements of (and in) music, that which makes mus
music - spiritual too - can, by definition, not be grasped by linguistic analys
Music is not reducible to linguistic forms. It cannot be wrapped up in linguistic c
cepts and categories. Crumb makes clear that the use of music-theoretical terms
musicological concepts are always already inadequate to write and talk about
important elements of (this) music (for example, its spiritual impulse). However
does this mean that we cannot (and should not) communicate about music anym
(except perhaps in other music)? Are we approaching Wittgenstein' s famous stat
ment: "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent"? (Both necessity a
obligation ?6) What do Crumb's black angels have to say? What do these messeng
want to tell us? Beyond discursive language, beyond linguistic frames that try
explain or to say in (other) words the message of Black Angels ? How can one spe
about (this) music? How can one reach the " spiritual impulse"? The groping, cau
tious thoughts that follow are directed by listening to Black Angels, to this mu
that makes the walls of Jericho collapse.
(to be continued)
Hear the sounds of the jungle. Hear the night. Hear the Dark Land. He
the fear. In tempore belli.7 Foreign warriors in an unknown land, fighting
invisible opponent. No dramatized lamentation, no still moment of co
templation following a lost battle as in Samuel Barber s Adagio in Platoon,
but rough and raucous, all-penetrating: sounds of an inconceivable ter
when the night falls and the enemy approaches. Like insects.
No, Crumb not only makes us listen to this experience, he makes
smell it, feel it, see it. This is not music for the ears alone. This is music fo
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i86 Music and Spirituality
The reign of birds seems to have been replaced by the age of insects, with
its much more molecular vibrations, chirring, rustling, buzzing, clicking,
scratching, and scraping. Birds are vocal, but insects are instrumental:
drums and violins, guitars and cymbals. A becoming- insect has replaced
becoming-bird, or forms a block with it. The insect is closer, better able
to make audible the truth that all becomings are molecular (cf. Martenos
waves, electronic music). The molecular has the capacity to make the
elementary communicate with the cosmic: precisely because it effects a
dissolution of form that connects the most diverse longitudes and latitudes,
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Marcel Cobussen 187
into unseen insectile life forms ... : this music becomes a nonlinear malevo-
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i88 Music and Spirituality
1.4 Devil-Music
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Marcel Cobussen 189
. . . The music . . .
Quando Judex est venturus. When the Judge the truth's undr aping
Cuneta stride discussurus. Cats from every bag escaping!
Why this Dies Irae theme? Why a reference to this personal meditation
on death and judgment? Why this apocalyptic outlook, based upon a deep
fear of God? This prayer is far from a last elegy recited for the deceased,
invoking light and inspiring hope for eternal life. Especially in the third
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io Music and Spirituality
stanza, the dead are confronted with anything but eternal peace as the Last
Trumpet - the Trump of Doom - resonates, rocking the foundations of the
underworld. Both the personal impetus and the frightful tenor of the text
turn the Dies Irae into something different than a requiem embalmed in sol-
emn serenity.14 And still, the melody is played so sweetly, softly, innocently,
vulnerably. As if the war for Crumb has two sides continuously alternating
with each other: between temptation and repugnance, between beauty and
ugliness . . .
Without a doubt, the Dies Irae theme. This is the way one must feel in
the trenches : like the Day of Judgment has come. And that does not promise
well. But again, why quote such a personal meditation, such an intimate
conversation with God, filled with doom, fear, gloominess, violence, and
deterrence? Why this gaze inside of a human being who is far from sure
that it will end happily for him? Is Crumb struggling with two wars, the one
a historical and political event, the other Man's possibility to use violence
and to kill? This "other war," the fundamental violence in and between
human beings, always lurks and suddenly stares us straight in the face dur-
ing a concrete war. There is always the possibility that man turns against his
reason, overindulges himself, loses himself.
The devoted contemplations as expressed in the Dies Irae sequence can
very well be interpreted as an encounter with this inner war, the confron-
tation with our dark sides, war as extremity. It is this inner war that pri-
marily occupies Georges Bataille in his La somme athologique [The Summa
Atheologica].15 Only when one seeks to repudiate the evil - the production
of death, this inner war - does an unbearable and actually inhuman situa-
tion arise, Bataille writes. Therefore, he argues in favor of another relation
to war, evil, and violence - one of respect and attention. The value of life is
only revealed in extremities; that is why one should cherish it. An extremity
is not so much an antipode of life as it is a boundary or limit (low point and
high point). Bataille is concerned about an alternative relation to war and,
through war, to excluded extremities. Because that is what war reveals: the
extremity that haunts and menaces us. And it is the extremity - the border
experience also sought out in this Dies Irae sequence, or conceivably evoked
in this whole "Danse Macabre" - that is important here. Bataille thinks of
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Marcel Cobussen 191
this extremity as that with which one is not able to come to grips. Extrem
always escape the rules, leaving them powerless and insignificant.16
War can be considered as a representation of this extremity. Ideo
plus the whole network of imaginary fixations and identities (race, nat
doctrine, tradition) only function as a pretext for war; their phrase
images only accompany the war. If a war breaks out, it goes its own way
"discourses" that legitimize it blur. In other words, extremity escapes t
idea of means of the war. It approaches us with a merciless and uncontr
lable violence. Through the experience of extremities, the inner wa
comes into existence. However, in that experience - in that encounter -
are left empty-handed; this war that occupies us is neither means, nor
nor representation. What remains is an experience without certainty, w
out substance, without sense; it is a no mans land between life and d
Would it be possible to dance there?
2. Absence
(-")
Can we go from the images from the Dark Land to some open p
please remove ' such as a clearing, or lighting? Through language,
encounter the spiritual? Le s turn for a moment to Heidegger. I
Weltbildes [The Age of the World Picture], Heidegger writes about t
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192 Music and Spirituality
of their functioning. It seeks to use the objects of its knowledge ; it is an assault upon
things. By a compelling unconcealedness, things are not only used , but also claimed
this attitude is foremost reserved for artists. According to Heidegger, it is art that
makes the nondisclosure of the world experienceable. It opens a space in which the
closing off of things is able to make itself visible, audible, tangible. Man ought to
learn to turn toward a being, think about it in regard to its being, but by means of
this thinking, at the same time, let it rest upon itself in its very own being. And it
is art that reveals a secret without affecting or harming it.19 It breaks open a place,
in the openness of which everything is other than usual. Otherwise than being.
And this is not an experience of some otherworldliness, some " higher " world ;
no, Heidegger talks about amazement - amazement about the inexhaustibility of
reality. This " truth " (Heidegger prefers the Greek word aletheia) is no metaphysi-
cal concept, hanging over beings ; it is a " truth " that reveals itself always and only
in beings.
to speak . . . Color shines and wants only to shine. When we analyze it in rational
terms by measuring its wavelengths, it is gone. It shows itself only when it remains
undisclosed and unexplained ... Tobe sure, the painter also uses pigment, but
in such a way that color is not used up but rather only now comes to shine forth"
(Heidegger 2002, 24-25). 20
Crumb, by stating that (the spiritual impulse of) music cannot be understood
by linguistic concepts, seems to follow Heideggers analyses: in framing and naming
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Marcel Cobussen 193
tered. By trying to lay bare its structures through formal analyses - by reducin
" music itself " (Crumb) withdraws. Scientific language seems to be unsuitable to
egories and fixating theories ? How can one reach beyond these languages in
to encounter musics spiritual impulse? (Let me immediately add that it is
all clear if we can make use of this possessive pronoun.) The spiritual in m
As music (perhaps)? In Black Angels ? How to reveal this spirituality thro
language? If I dwell in Heidegger's house for some more time, I could say
what I am looking for is a language that does not explain, that does not fix.
beyond the concepts with which we want to frame and name music. To let m
appear - to appear as music - language should " behave " like art.21 Heideg
"To see this, only the right concept of language is needed. In the current
language is held to be a kind of communication. It serves for verbal exchange
only puts forth in words and statements what is overtly or covertly intended
communicated; language alone brings what is, as something that is, into the
for the first time . . . Language, by naming beings for the first time, first b
beings to word and to appearance. " Heidegger calls this "projective saying.
he immediately adds, "Projective saying is saying which, in preparing the say
simultaneously brings the unsayable as such into the world " (Heidegger 2
45-46). 22 Language and art, regarded this way, are both a bestowal and a b
ning: they thrust up the unfamiliar and extraordinary, which means that it
brings with them a strife with the familiar and ordinary.
Might this be an opening? A clearing to talk and write about (or bet
around) music?23 Through the becoming- music of language. Is that a pos
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194 Music and Spirituality
way to encounter " the important elements " of music (the spiritual impulse, for
example)?24
Deleuze and Guattari speak of two possible treatments or functions of lan-
guage: the one they call "major" (definedby constants, homogeneity, and systems),
the other "minor" (definedby variation, heterogeneity, and creativity). The minor
is engrafted in the major, always already a part of it, yet separable from it. It
refers to a strange proliferation of shifting effects, a taste for overload and para-
Music. Deleuze and Guattari see an analogy between the becoming minor of (a)
language and music: " The closer a language gets to this state, the closer it comes
not only to a system of musical notation, but also to music itself " (Deleuze and
Guattari 1987, 104). Deterritorializing the major language. A becoming minor of
the major language. The minor as a becoming whose value is to trigger uncontrol-
lable movements and deterritorializations of the major. (And the bigger and more
dominant the major language, the more it is affected by variations that transpose
and transform it.)
This is my idea: to talk in a minor language around music, to write (in)
a musical language, deferring to name and frame music and thereby tracing
a spiritual force.
(to be continued)
Modal music, tonal and atonal music, chromaticism and soundscapes: the
fragmentized character of Black Angels divulges itself not only in abrupt
transitions from one image to another or loose fragments within one image,
but also through frequent shifts from one musical language to another.
Sometimes these changes take place in a linear (though nonhistorical) way:
soundscapes followed by tonal music, atonality followed by modal music. In
"Pavana Lachrymae," however, something else takes place. The slow, solemn
melody, referring to and quoting from Schubert's Der Tod und das Mdchen
[Death and the Maiden], is somewhere halfway traversed by squeaking glis-
sandi and fleeting chromaticism.26 (Insects, perhaps, who come to disrupt a
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Marcel Cobussen 195
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196 Music and Spirituality
Fascinated by Black Angels. By black angels. Still angels. Why? Because they
are still endowed with some supernatural powers? And why black? Because
of the darkness, where one cannot see clearly, thereby losing control (the
logos of the eye, which privileges sight/site31)? "Black Angels was conceived
as a kind of parable on our troubled contemporary world . . . The image of
the 'black angel' was a conventional device used by early painters to sym-
bolize the fallen angel. "32 The fallen angel. Lucifer. Symbol for the excluded,
for the outcast, deprived of their homes. Expelled and offered like a phar-
makos.x Because they cannot be controlled, disciplined, or framed! Is that
the reason they are still angels? Intangible, ineligible, between categories.
Perhaps you can exclude them, but you cannot get rid of them either; they
keep their powers. You cannot not relate to them. Beyond your power of
escape or resistance. Fascinating.
Black Angels is obviously music. But is music also a black angel? Otherwise
than being? Otherwise than responding to the manner of questioning that
has evolved in most methods and theories? (Ferrara 1991, 39). Otherwise
than fitting perfectly into some general categories that are pre-pared for
it? And is it somewhere outside these categories that we have to search for
music's spirituality? Let us return to Crumb's own words once more: "I
have always considered music to be a very strange substance, a substance
endowed with magical properties. Music is tangible, almost palpable, and
yet unreal, illusive. Music is analyzable only on the most mechanistic level;
the important elements - the spiritual impulse, the psychological curve, the
metaphysical implications - are understandable only in terms of the music
itself" (Gillespie 1986, 20, emphasis added).
But how does one think and talk about music as a being-in-the- world that
is not always already pre-dicated, pre-determined, and pre-scribed - and
thereby foreclosed - by a language that organizes its meanings and sense?34
Is it possible to do justice to the spirituality of music, a "description" that
stands midway between describing (repetition) and showing the musical
phenomenon in itself (singularity)? Is it possible to find a way that com-
bines the explanatory repetition of music with the heterological respect for
its uniqueness, singularity, and discernibility?
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Marcel Cobussen 197
Where is this space between words - these words that frame and nam
(and maim?) music? As music, for example. Where? Where can I f
it? How to bridge the gap between the "Here" and the "There"? Ma
Buber responds that, by searching for the encounter, one will not find
(1958, 13). What is he talking about? Serendipity? Minorities? Surrende
Something between activity and passivity?
"Does the Angel of Death lead us from the 'Here' toward the 'The
Previously, the sacred filled the grave for us the way Jesus Christ
Christians, overcame death through resurrection. Today we have no
sacred and no such angel to lead us from the 'Here' to the There'" (T
2000, 116). And according to Bataille . . .
. . . the angel is "a movement of worlds, and I cannot just love him as if he
were a being like other beings. He is the wound and hidden flow that turns
me into shattering crystal." In the ecstatic vision Bataille is describing, the
angel appears as "just a shimmering spot, having the depth and darkness of
night and beauty of inner light. But quivering - almost imperceptibly - this
angel raises his crystal sword and it breaks" (Bataille 1988, 23).
This brief image of an angel that suddenly interrupts the text as an
unexpected visitor, a traversing voice, gives Bataille the desire to die, to stop
existing. A sarabande de la Muerte Oscura ?
Why suddenly a Spanish title? "Sarabanda de la Muerte Oscura." To
honor the Spanish American victims in the Vietnam War? To globalize and
generalize the world problems that incited Crumb to compose Black Angels ?
(The words in the score to be uttered - mostly numbers - are in French,
German, Russian, Swahili, Hungarian, and Japanese.) Or to mystify the
dead? ("Today, it is not normal to be dead," Jean Baudrillard writes [1993,
126].) A refusal to bring the "there-ness" of death to the "here-ness" of life?
Why? Don't we urgently need a new familiarity with the dead (especially
"in tempore belli")?
And isn't music one of the most powerful practices to bring death to
consciousness - that is, to life? Precisely through a sarabande, through
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i8 Music and Spirituality
" The chimes ! The chimes !" the old man cried,
3. Return
(...)
Spirituality in music. Maybe we were searching in the wrong place
were looking for a controllable (and thereby reductive) dimension of m
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Marcel Cobussen 199
the spiritual but reproblematizing the relationship with it. "Thou that can
measured" (Buber 1958, 47).
But not fully detached from, either. Let us return to the beginning of this essay.
There I tried to open a space for the spiritual dimension in music without refer-
ring to some otherworldliness and without locking it up into a new category. I was
tion by a listener. " Neither . . . nor" . . . and simultaneously " both . . . and " . . .
Let me be clear once more: the spiritual is, for me, no archaic foundation, no
thing itself " is thus both secondary and provisional. Derrida radically puts into
question these secondary and provisional characteristics of the sign. Following
Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, he makes clear that any sign (both signifier
and signified) only derives meaning due to a network of oppositions that distin-
guishes them and then relates them to one another. This means, first of all, that
a signified concept is never present in and of itself, as a sufficient presence that
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200 Music and Spirituality
would refer only to itself: " Every concept is inscribed in a chain or in a system
within which it refers to the other, to other concepts, by means of the systematic
(f)act of speech always comes first! It is only in and through a sign system that
"things " come into existence. This does not imply that everything can be expressed
in language, that there is nothing beyond language. However, it does mean that
" every referent, all reality has the structure of a differential trace, and that one
cannot refer to this 'real' except in an interpretive experience. The latter neither
rals. But, again, to distance oneself from the habitual structure of reference does
not amount to saying that there is nothing beyond language- on the contrary.
Much of Derrida s work is precisely aimed towards an undermining of what he
calls logocentrism, the claim that signs refer to some e(x)ternal and fixed origin
and truth (a metaphysics of presence), the claim that the meaning of a word has
its origin in a structure of reality that exists independent of language. The critique
of logocentrism is, above all else, the search for "the other of language," "the other
which is beyond language and which summons language " (Derrida in Kearney
1984, 124). "The other " (maybe I can follow Crumb here and replace it with the
nonsynonymous substitute "the spiritual dimension of music") always already
exceeds language, but also requires it. That is the paradox.
With Derrida, another trace is found to think the space between reality and
representation. Another argument is made to search for music's spiritual space
beyond or between linguistic categories - one, however, that must simultaneously
be invoked by language. A paradox. To talk about "something" (spirituality in
music) that always already escapes words, concepts, and terms. Which has to
escape them to save its nonidentifiable identity, its nonsite. Between representa-
tion and reality. Beyond, between, and before signs and sign systems. Perhaps
it belongs to the logic of paralogy - beside, aside from, beyond logos, beyond
words, beyond reason. If everything starts with the representation ; if representa-
tion is needed to call something into presence ; if this means an eternal deferral
of the presence of a thing ; if in other words, spirituality must be substituted
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Marcel Cobussen 201
3.1 God-Music
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202 Music and Spirituality
Let us return to Bataille. Bataille 's a-theology explores the empty space
God left behind after His disappearance, an empty space in which it is
impossible to relate to and to communicate with God. Here, nothing is
left but an "a-logy," a no logos, a not-being-able-to-speak that disturbs the
analogies of age-old religious traditions, which takes their place without
substituting them. Precisely on the fringes of this empty space, Bataille
seeks to encounter the spiritual - the spiritual no longer coinciding with
God s presence, but with his absence (ten Kate 1994, 414).
The consequence of this thought is that the spiritual cannot be presented
as one pole in a dual system: the spiritual is not opposed to the profane
(Bataille speaks of "the sacred," but I prefer to speak about "the spiritual"
as it seems to me a broader, more "open" word). The spiritual constantly
traverses the profane world.41 If some special image fits the spiritual, it is
not that of a world or territory, but a boundary or limit. In the same way, the
spiritual is not an object that can be explored from the site of the profane.
For Bataille, God does not coincide with the spiritual boundary, although
the spiritual boundary is certainly divine. However, it leads us to the least
holy of places, wandering around to approach the unapproachable : the war,
the Dark Land, black angels, the "muerte oscura." In extreme experiences
(at the spiritual boundary), one does not encounter God, but an unknown
void, beyond every categorization, impossible to reduce to an ontological
category through some dialectical move and past every possible appropria-
tion. The limit of instrumentalization can in no way be instrumentalized.42
Bataille regards spirituality as the relationship to this void, an absence - the
experience of the limit of the known, controllable world. Not reducible to
any category. This also means : not reducible to the Unknown, the Unsayable,
the Absolute Other, Transcendence. Lets say it is between the known and
the unknown, between the sayable and the unsayable. "Between," that is,
without a proper place, without a place of its own. An a-topos. This bound-
ary, this limit, is no longer the place or position where a glimpse can be
caught of a divine world, of God. No longer the medium that introduces
Man to some otherworldliness, to that which transcends the boundary. It
is an empty space. And if God can no longer function as a necessary com-
plement to the instrumental life (if, in other words, the relation between
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Marcel Cobussen 203
Analyzing Black Angels. By analyzing it, one resolves it - that is, one dis-
solves it. It evaporates. That is actually the first meaning of Greek ava-Xuci).
In and through the analysis, one kills the music and thus loses it. One looses
it, one loses it.
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204 Music and Spirituality
(the "il y a," the "it happens" without a "who," a "what," or a "why"); (3)
by returning to the music - relistening to it, reanalyzing it, rediscussing it-
the listener loses himself or herself (in the music) (ten Kate 1994, 309).
Listening as a fall in the unknown.
Let's return to the buzzing, chirring, and shrieking of the electric insects, to
this audible techno -biology, to the becoming insect of music, to the becom-
ing music of insects. "Threnody III" confronts us again with swarms that
suddenly shift to the offensive. Because it is dark (the impenetrable darkness
of a nocturnal rainforest) the attacks are unanticipatable, and an enormous
tension thus fills the more quiet passages in the music. Be careful! They can
return any moment!
This is not only a composition with tones; here, the tones and their
inner selves are the scene of composing. The sounds extricate themselves
from definitions in terms of vibrations, specified by pitch, duration, and
frequency. What withdraws from these kinds of determinations is tim-
bre.44 Timbre is the difference between sounds that are otherwise identi-
lin and the same note on tuned percussion, and thus what also defers the
identification of that note. Timbre opens up the play of - the running to and
fro of - identity and difference, that is, the space between representation
(identification) and reality (the very impossibility of any adequate repre-
sentation). Timbre, according to Lyotard, introduces "a sort of infinity,
the indeterminacy of the harmonics within the frame determined by this
identity" (Lyotard 1991, 140).
If I am allowed to call timbre one of the places through which the musical-
spiritual can be experienced, it is interesting to see how Lyotard situates
it not in an ideality, but in the material itself - "immaterial matter," as he
calls it. "Immaterial," because it escapes the regime of being intelligible to
the understanding, because it does not fit within the faculties or capacities
of the mind, because it works outside of the active powers of the mind. And
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Marcel Cobussen 205
The echo of the "Sarabanda de la Muerte Oscura" leaves one to fear the
worst ... (as does the ending on number 13). Losing oneself in a world of
sound . . .
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2o6 Music and Spirituality
NOTES
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Marcel Cobussen 207
instrumentalized - where the instruments speak no less than the voice, and the v
plays no less than the instrument" (Deleuze and Guattari 1987, 96, 302-7).
10. Stanzas six and seven from the poem "The Lost Bells" by Frances E. W. Harper.
11. If I would like to bring this interpretation to a head, I could point at the fact tha
7 is mentioned first in "Devil-Music," while the 13 is in front in "God-Music." In
Sufi tradition it is sometimes suggested that it is in fact Iblis (Satan) who is most fai
ful to Allah. When Allah summons the angels to prostrate themselves before Ad
because he "knows the names," Iblis refuses, worshipping Adam (the image of
divine) rather than the divine itself. Iblis acts out of pure love and can be conside
the guardian of the divine throne, the creature most intimate with the creator. O
approaches the coincidentia oppositorum, either a simultaneous presence of contra
tories or a violent oscillation between them (Idei and McGinn 1999, 98-99)-
12. Starting from numerological connotations, the chanting of the numerals 1 throu
(in Hungarian) in "Devil-Music" imply a certain connection with the Good.
13. In this respect, the introduction of the Dies Irae theme in Black Angels differs from
quotations Hector Berlioz uses in the fifth and final part of his Symphonie Fantastiq
entitled "Dream of a Sabbath's Night." In the latter, the Dies Irae gradually turns
the "Ronde du Sabbat," the circle dance of the witches, whereas Crumb seems
oppose the Latin sequence to an uncontrolled and whirling dance.
14. The Dies Irae is an integral part of the requiem, the Latin death mass. It can be q
tioned, however, whether the Dies Irae is befitting of the intention of the requ
which starts as follows: "Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luc
eis" ("May eternal peace be upon them, Lord, and may the eternal light shine up
them"). This is in rather sharp contrast with the purport of the Dies Irae. Perhaps th
is why the last lines of the Dies Irae were later added by another author. Offende
the use of the first person singular in the composition, this unknown writer added t
prayer, "Pie Jesu Domine, dona eis requiem," in order to commemorate all the s
that have died and to nonetheless wish them eternal rest.
15. The thoughts expressed in this paragraph are based primarily on Georges Bataille 's
works. However, much inspiration was also derived from a book by Laurens ten Kate,
De lege plaats [ The Empty Space] .
16. Thus, for Bataille, evil is not the breach of the rules or the norms; that would imply
that evil is only a derivative of them, that the rule would be prexistent with regard to
the infringement. No, with the rule the infringement is given.
17. Heidegger doesn't completely reject the technological view on beings, but he refuses
to consider it as the only possible relation towards things. Besides, technology knows
its own "nearness" to things. One could for instance say that through the role coinci-
dence, art, and play have within ICT, pure control is broken.
18. In What is Called Thinking, Heidegger writes: "pure thanks is rather that we simply
think - think what is really and solely given, what is there to be thought" (Heidegger
1968, 143).
19. Heidegger calls preconceptions that indeed refer to a phenomenon but simultane-
ously keep a distance and stay extraneous "formal indications" [formale Anzeigen].
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2o8 Music and Spirituality
The phenomenon is granted some freedom, lest its explication is already ontically or
ontologically decided beforehand and prematurely.
20. In What is Called Thinking, Heidegger writes: "'using' does not mean the mere utiliz-
ing, using up, exploiting. Utilization is only the degenerate and debauched form of use.
When we handle a thing, for example, our hand must fit itself to the thing. Use implies
fitting response. Proper use does not debase what is being used - on the contrary, use
is determined and defined by leaving the used thing in its essential nature . . . 'To use'
means, first, to let a thing be what it is and how it is. To let it be this way requires that the
used thing be cared for in its essential nature - we do so by responding to the demands
which the used thing makes manifest in the given instance" (Heidegger 1968, 187, 191).
21. "All art, as the letting happen of the advent of the truth of what is, is, as such, essentially
poetry ," Heidegger writes (Heidegger 2002, 44). However, by this Heidegger doesn't
mean that all art forms are subordinate to linguistic arts. He understands poetry as a
place on the thither side of fixed meanings. In discussing the poetry of Georg Traki,
Heidegger comes to the idea that the musical always already permeates poetry.
22. Projective language (poetry) has to be understood here as both speaking and thinking.
23. "Writing about music" inclines towards an assault upon music, forcing music to say
what the preestablished categories and theories want it to say. "Writing around music"
takes into account that music is never reducible to linguistic concepts, that language
should speak about music only with the greatest reserve and openness. "Writing
around music" has no clear methods, is not trying to be complete, and does not deny
the existence of gaps and uncertainties.
24. Heidegger seems to be on the way to reverse the relation language-music. Language
appears as a lively and polysmie texture that asks for a description in musical terms.
Derrida's deconstruction of the sign, an undermining of every guarantee of sense and
reference, points in the same direction.
25 . Deleuze and Guattari write, "The problem of writing : in order to designate something
exactly, anexact expressions are utterly unavoidable. Not at all because it is a necessary
step, or because one can only advance by approximations: anexactitude is in no way
an approximation; on the contrary, it is the exact passage of that which is under way"
(1987, 20).
26. Death and the Maiden is probably inspired by a text by Matthias Claudius, a dialogue
between Death and a girl he has come to collect. Death's response to the girl's pas-
sionate plea to spare her is, "I am a friend, and do not come to punish - you will sleep
sweetly in my arms." What strikes me here is the reassurance that follows after an
expression of fear to enter unknown places: Death asks the girl to just give up, to sur-
render, but without removing her insecurity.
27. "By placing all its components in continuous variation, music itself becomes a super-
linear system, a rhizome instead of a tree, and enters the service of a virtual cosmic
continuum of which even holes, silences, ruptures, and breaks are a part" (Deleuze
and Guattari 1987, 95).
28. "We do not need to suppress tonality; we need to turn it loose . . . slipping through its
net instead of breaking with it," Deleuze and Guattari write (1987, 35o).
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Marcel Cobussen 209
29. I borrow this idea on the prefix hyper from Dutch philosopher Henk Oosterling
30. In Une pensee finie, Jean-Luc Nancy distinguishes between "lecrit" and "l'excrit.
two are not opposed, but in the "l'crit" (a writing, an inscription), the "l'ex
always resonates as an unanticipatable and uncontrollable rest. "L'excrit" escapes
articulatable meaning in a text (any recognition, affirmation, understanding) but
ertheless cannot do without it. "Cri" and "l'excrit" go together (Nancy 1990, 55-
31. I am referring here to a metaphysics of presence as described by Jacques Derrid
32. Program notes in CD booklet.
33. "The character of the pharmakos has been compared to a scapegoat. The evil
the outside, the expulsion of the evil, its exclusion out of the body (and out) of
city - these are the two major senses of the character and of the ritual" (Derrida
130). The pharmakos is charged with everything that is bad in a given period, th
everything that resisted signifying signs.
34. "We hardly have logical spaces for asking if our linguistic means are genuinely
service of the inexhaustible complexity of reality or whether, on the contrary,
are used to suppress and distort," Gemma Corradi Fiumara writes in The Other Si
Language (1990, 181).
35. "What have I come to mean by surrender as of now? Seminally I mean by it
tive love: whatever other meanings it may have flown from it. Among them are
involvement, suspension of received notions, pertinence of everything, identifica
and risk of being hurt. To surrender means to take as fully, to meet as immedia
as possible whatever the occasion may be. It means not to select, not to believe
one can know quickly what one's experience means, hence what is to be underst
and acted on: thus it means not to suppose that one can do justice to the experi
with one's received notions, with one's received feeling and thinking, even with
received structure of that feeling and thinking: it means to meet, whatever it b
much as possible in its originariness, its itself-ness" (Wolff 1976, 20).
36. Stanzas 13 and 14 from "The Lost Bells. "
37. In The Wisdom of Insecurity, Alan W. Watts describes the unknown as the real
ent in which we live, the unknown in the midst of coming into being. Therefore
unknown cannot be avoided and nothing can be ultimately fixed: "to define is to
late, to separate some complex of forms from the stream of life . . . Because it i
use and nature of words and thoughts to be fixed, definite, isolated, it is extre
hard to describe the most important characteristic of life - its movement and flu
. . . Part of man's frustration is that he has become accustomed to expect languag
thought to offer explanations which they cannot give. To want life to be 'intellig
in this sense is to want it to be something other than life ... If we want to keep the
language, still using terms as 'spiritual' and 'material,' the spiritual must mean
indefinable,' that which, because it is living, must ever escape the framework of
fixed form" (Watts 1951, 46-48, 71).
38. Two remarks should be made here. First, St. Augustine already recognized s
demonic power in music, experiencing that it always already escapes the frames of d
cursive language. Second, by pointing toward a prethematic space and preestabli
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210 Music and Spirituality
40. The idea of paraspirituality is grafted onto Taylor s reflections on the "para/sacred"
and I paraphrase his thoughts to make them productive for music.
41. Bataille generally describes the profane world as the order of utility, instrumentality,
or finality. For the human being who tries to make the surrounding world subservient
to his use, to live means first of all to survive. In order to survive, he must submit the
world to his needs. The point, however, is that by doing this, Man submits himself
to the order of use and usefulness. By reducing existence to the order of utility and
finality, Man indirectly submits himself to that which he tried to submit in the first
place. According to Bataille, the use Man makes of his surroundings (goods as well as
fellow men) doesn't do justice to this; actually, use is misuse! The spiritual refers to
the borderlines of the order of utility (ten Kate 1994, 436-37).
42. The meaning of spirituality is not "a divine origin" or "founded in God's will"; here,
spirituality, first of all, opposes a desire that is economically based and structured.
43. The three letters g, 0, and d become an empty space; everybody can use them. There
is no fixed owner of this "name," neither in the form of a person nor an idea (ten Kate
1994, 517).
44. According to Nancy (following Antoine Bonnet), timbre can be called "the real" of
music. At the same time (and perhaps because of this) it resists, unlike other musical
parameters, any notation, both in a score and in language (Nancy 2002, 76-82).
45. "That matter appears to escape determination by concepts because it is rigorously
(and not exactly) singular: its quality depends perhaps on a constellation of conceiv-
able parameters, but this constellation, the one which takes place now, cannot be
anticipated, foreseen" (Lyotard 1991, 155).
REFERENCES
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Marcel Cobussen 211
Buber, Martin. 1958. 1 and Thou. Trans. Ronald Gregor Smith. New York:
Sons.
Eshun, Kodwo. 1998. More Brilliant Than the Sun. London: Quart
Ferrara, Lawrence. 1991. Philosophy and the Analysis of Music. N
Finn, Geraldine. 1996. Why Althusser Killed His Wife. Atlantic Hig
Fiumara, Gemma Corradi. 1990. The Other Side of Language. Lo
Foucault, Michel. 1970. The Order of Things. Trans. Alan Sh
Books.
Gillespie, Don, ed. 1986. George Crumb: Profile of a Composer. New York: C. F. Peters.
Harper, Frances E. W. 1895. The Lost Bells, http://auth0rsdirect0ry.c0m/b/pfewh09.htm.
Heidegger, Martin. 1968. What Is Called Thinking. Trans. J. Glenn Gray. New York: Harper &
Row.
Press.
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